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Lecture 4 Accounting Cycle II: journals, ledgers, trial balance

Learn about journals, ledgers, and trial balance in the accounting cycle. Understand the recording process, debits, credits, and bookkeeping entries. Discover the importance of trial balance and error detection.

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Lecture 4 Accounting Cycle II: journals, ledgers, trial balance

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  1. Lecture 4Accounting Cycle II: journals, ledgers, trial balance

  2. CONTENT Recap Previous Lecture Today’s Lecture The Account Steps in the Recording Process The Recording Process Illustrated The Trial Balance • The Equation & Expansion of Basic Equation • A= L + C • A+E = L+C+R • Debit and credits • Books of Original Entry (Day Books) • Sales DB • Purchase DB • Return Inwards DB • Return Outwards DB • Cash Book • Journal • Ledgers • Summary illustration of journalizing and posting • Balancing off accounts • Nature and purpose of Trial Balance • Trial Balance Errors • Locating Errors

  3. Accounting cycle

  4. Books of original entry Books of original entry(Day Books) are books in which we first record transactions. It only lists similar type of transactions in one book. Day Book types: • Sales Day Book • Purchase Day Book • Returns Inwards Day Book • Returns Outwards Day Book • Cash Book (It also serves as a ledger) • Journal

  5. Journalizing Journalizing - Entering transaction data in the journal. Illustration:On September 1, Ray Neal invested $15,000 cash in the business, and Softbyte purchased computer equipment for $7,000 cash. Sept. 1 Cash 15,000 • R. Neal, Capital 15,000 Issued common stock 7,000 Computer equipment • Cash 7,000

  6. Journalizing Simple and Compound Entries Illustration:Assume that on July 1, Butler Company purchases a delivery truck costing $14,000. It pays $8,000 cash now and agrees to pay the remaining $6,000 on account. General Journal Sept. 1 Delivery equipment 14,000 • Cash 8,000 6,000 • Accounts payable Purchase truck for cash and balance on credit

  7. Journalizing The journal is form of diary for other items that do not belong to above 5 Day Books. Some of the main uses of the Journal: • The purchase and sale of fixed assets on credit • Writing off bad debts • The correction of errors in the ledger accounts • Opening entries. • Adjustments to any of the entries in the ledgers

  8. What is an invoice? Businesses sell their products on credit. For each credit sale, the seller will give or send a document to the buyer showing full details of the goods sold and their prices. Invoice will serve as source document for recording such credit sales in Day Books. Invoice details will go to the seller’s Sales Day Book and the buyer’s Purchases Day Book.

  9. Invoice: Example Purchase Order: 10/A/980 Invoice No 16554 Wood&plus Ltd 7 Amir Temur Tashkent 10000 1 July 2009 To: Furniture Co. Ltd 15 Nukus street Tashkent 10000

  10. Credit & Debit note • When the seller agrees to take back goods and refund the amount paid in full (or part of it), it will send document called a credit note to customer. Only then a return is recorded in Returns Inwards Day Book. • If the supplier agrees, goods bought may be returned and customer sends a document called a debit note to the supplier with return details. Only then a return is recorded in Returns Outwards Day Book.

  11. Credit & Debit note Debit Note No 989 Furniture Co. Ltd 15 Nukus street Tashkent 10000 To: Wood&plus Ltd 7 Amir Temur str. Tashkent 10000 7 July 2009

  12. Rules of Accounting A + E = L + C + R

  13. Ledgers Ledger is a simply a history or record of one type of transaction. It is where the double entry (Dr, Cr) entered. Types of ledgers that most businesses use: • Sales Ledger • Purchase Ledger • General Ledger

  14. The Account • Record of increases and decreases in a specific asset, liability, equity, revenue, or expense item. • Debit = “Left” • Credit = “Right” Account An Account can be illustrated in a T-Account form.

  15. Debit & Credit • Double-entry accounting system • Each transaction must affect two or more accounts to keep the basic accounting equation in balance. • Recording done by debiting at least one account and crediting another. • DEBITS must equal CREDITS.

  16. TYPES OF ACCOUNTS ACCOUNTS PERSONALACCOUNTS IMPERSONALACCOUNTS Debtor’sACCOUNTS Creditor’sACCOUNTS RealACCOUNTS (for possessions of all kinds) NominalACCOUNTS(for E and R) E.g.: Machineries, Equipment, Fixtures, Building, Stock

  17. Types of accounts • Personal accounts – these are for debtors and creditors (i.e. customers and suppliers). • Impersonal accounts – divided between “real” accounts and “nominal” accounts. - Real accounts in which possessions are recorded. Examples are buildings, machinery, fixtures and stock. - Nominal accounts in which expenses, income and capital are recorded.

  18. Balancing off ledger Calculating and entering the difference between the totals of the both sides of account If the debits exceed the credits, the excess is a debit balance If the credits exceed the debits, the excess is a credit balance

  19. Balancing 5 stages • Add up both sides to find out their totals. Note: do not write anything in the account at this stage • Deduct the smaller total from the larger total to find the balance • Now enter the balance on the side with the smallest total. This now means the totals will be equal. • Enter totals which level with each other. Totals are usually double-underlined • Now enter the balance b/d on the line below the totals on the opposite side to the balance c/d shown above the totals.

  20. Example

  21. Balancing off ledger • c/d – carried down on the last day of the period. • The balance c/d is known as the closing balance. • b/d – brought down to start off entries for the following month. • The balance b/d is known as the opening balance

  22. Trial Balance • It is a statement compiled at the end of a specific accounting period • Prove that the total of the accounts with debit balances is equal to the total of the accounts with credit balances • Before preparing financial statements

  23. Example of Trial Balance

  24. What to do if trial balance is not balanced?

  25. Trial Balance • For every debit entry there is a credit entry; • The value for each debit and credit entry has been entered in appropriate accounts; • The balance on each account has been calculated, extracted and entered correctly in the trial balance; • The debit and credit columns in the trial balance are the same.

  26. Trial Balance (i) error of omission - no debit or credit entries were made for a particular transaction; completely missed the transaction (ii) complete reversal of entries – entries were made in the wrong side of the accounts; a transaction requires a debit entry in account A and a credit entry in account B but account A was credited and account B was debited instead (iii) error of accounting principle – a transaction may have been entered in the wrong type of account, e.g. the purchase of a new delivery van may have been debited to the purchases account instead of the delivery vans account.

  27. Trial Balance (iv) error of original entry – the original figure was incorrectly entered in both accounts, e.g. $100 instead of $1,000 (v) compensating errors – an error on one side of the ledger account is compensated or “cancelled” by an error of equal amount on the other side of the account, e.g. both the Bank and the Trade Creditor accounts were each incorrectly reduced by an equal amount of $100 (vi) error of commission – entries were made on the correct sides of the accounts but to the wrong personal account, e.g. credit sales to C Green were incorrectly recorded in the accounts of K Green.

  28. How to correct errors? Search for the trial balance of missing accounts. Example: suppose the accountant omitted Discount Received from the trial balance. Total credits would then be $34,000 ($34,050-$50). Trace each account from the ledger to the trial balance, and locate the missing account. ii) Divide the difference between total debits and total credits by 2. A debit treated as a credit, or vice versa, doubles the amount of error. Suppose the accountant posted a $500 credit as a debit. Total debits contain $500, and total credits omit the $500. The out-of-balance amount is $1000. Dividing the difference by 2 identifies the $500 amount of the transaction. Then search the trial balance for a $500 transaction and trace to the account affected. Divide the out-of-balance amount by 9. If the result is evenly divisible by 9, the error may be a slide (e.g: writing $1,000 as $100) or a transposition (e.g: treating $1,200 as $2,100). E.g.: suppose discount was printed as $500 instead of $50 (slide-type error). Total credits would differ from total debits by $450 ($500-$50=$450). Divide the $450 by 9 yields $50, the correct amount of Discount Received. Trace $50 through the ledger until you reach the Discount Received account. You have then found the error.

  29. References: • Wood, F. and Sangster, A. (2005). Business Accounting 1, 10th ed., FT: Prentice Hall, chapters 5, 6, 25, 26, 28, 32 • Horngren & Harrison (2008), Financial and Managerial Accounting, Pearson Prentice Hall, chapter 2. • Dyson, J.R (2004) Accounting for Non-Accounting Students, chapter 3 & 5. • Britton, A. and Waterston, C. (2003) Financial Accounting, 3rd ed., FT: Prentice Hall, chapter 5. • Gillespie et al (2000) Principles of Financial Accounting, 2nd ed., FT: Prentice Hall, chapter 3. • Glautier, M & Underdown B (2001) Accounting Theory and Practice, 7th edition, chapters 7 & 8

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